Nanoelectronic quantum dot devices exploiting the charge-Kondo paradigm have been established as versatile and accurate analogue quantum simulators of fundamental quantum impurity models. In particular, hybrid metal-semiconductor dots connected to two metallic leads realize the two-channel Kondo (2CK) model, in which Kondo screening of the dot charge pseudospin is frustrated. In this article, a two-channel charge-Kondo device made instead from graphene components is considered, realizing a pseudogapped version of the 2CK model. The model is solved using Wilson's Numerical Renormalization Group method, uncovering a rich phase diagram as a function of dot-lead coupling strength, channel asymmetry, and potential scattering. The complex physics of this system is explored through its thermodynamic properties, scattering T-matrix, and experimentally measurable conductance. The strong coupling pseudogap Kondo phase is found to persist in the channel-asymmetric two-channel context, while in the channel-symmetric case, frustration results in a novel quantum phase transition. Remarkably, despite the vanishing density of states in the graphene leads at low energies, a linear conductance is found at zero temperature at the frustrated critical point, which is of a non-Fermi liquid type. Our results suggest that the graphene charge-Kondo platform offers a unique possibility to access multichannel pseudogap Kondo physics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12091513 | DOI Listing |
Nanomaterials (Basel)
April 2022
School of Physics, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland.
Nanoelectronic quantum dot devices exploiting the charge-Kondo paradigm have been established as versatile and accurate analogue quantum simulators of fundamental quantum impurity models. In particular, hybrid metal-semiconductor dots connected to two metallic leads realize the two-channel Kondo (2CK) model, in which Kondo screening of the dot charge pseudospin is frustrated. In this article, a two-channel charge-Kondo device made instead from graphene components is considered, realizing a pseudogapped version of the 2CK model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
October 2015
CNRS, Laboratoire de Photonique et de Nanostructures (LPN), 91460 Marcoussis, France.
Many-body correlations and macroscopic quantum behaviours are fascinating condensed matter problems. A powerful test-bed for the many-body concepts and methods is the Kondo effect, which entails the coupling of a quantum impurity to a continuum of states. It is central in highly correlated systems and can be explored with tunable nanostructures.
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